Message from the Dean

"What's going on?" you might ask. There's certainly no surprise, even as we look on with pride, about the success of our alumni with new jobs, new publications, and alumni mentoring of our current students. We expect that! But ... what's going on with all the new initiatives within the Pardee RAND Graduate School? As you'll see in a quick scan of this issue of Findings, in just the past several months we've had the dedication of the James Q. Wilson Collection, the award of the first ever Harold Brown Faculty Fellowship, and the announcement of the new Pardee Initiative for Global Human Progress. I'm pleased to report that these are all the early results from the graduate school's Be the Answer Campaign — our first major fundraising initiative off to a tremendous start. So, that's what's going on!

Our Be the Answer Campaign is a five-year initiative to strengthen the financial foundation of the Pardee RAND Graduate School, to provide the financial assistance essential to attracting and supporting the most capable students from around the world, and to provide a comprehensive educational program unmatched by any other public policy graduate school. The campaign's priorities are tuition scholarships and dissertation fellowships; faculty fellowships; visiting scholars and practitioners; and current and endowed core student support — the flexible funding that pays for needs ranging from health insurance for students and their families to course development and even high-performance "analyst computers" for students.

We began the "quiet phase" of the campaign just under two years ago and are deeply appreciative of the donors who have made significant leadership gift commitments to get us started. As of this month, Pardee RAND supporters have made or pledged gifts totaling $14.1 million. We will be featuring many of these initial gifts and their impact in Findings over the next year, beginning with Fred Pardee's recent $3.6 million gift providing endowed core student support and establishing the Pardee Initiative. You'll hear more about the campaign, and the already visible results of these early efforts, not only in Findings but also in our Pardee RAND alumni events, joint events with the RAND Alumni Association, and in our more informal lunches, dinners, and alumni visits to the school. I'll be working with your alumni representative to the Board of Governors, Samantha Ravich, and other members of our alumni community to find the best methods for getting the word out and for getting your ideas about how to best support the campaign priorities.

I look forward to talking with you about these new initiatives and programs,

Susan Marquis
Dean

Around Campus

Dean's Movie Nights Prompt Discussion of Fracking

Susan Marquis hosted a Dean's Movie Night in late February with a viewing of "Gasland," a documentary examining hydraulic fracturing, the controversial method of natural gas extraction involving horizontal drilling into shale formations. The discussion continued a week later with the viewing of "FrackNation," a documentary that addresses what the filmmakers claim is misinformation about the process of hydraulic fracturing as described in "Gasland."

After the movie, the RAND project team studying the impact of Marcellus Shale natural gas extraction in Pennsylvania led a discussion of the two movies. The student discussion leads were Aviva Litovitz (cohort '08) and Shmuel Abramzon (cohort '10); professors Aimee Curtright, Costa Samaras, and Nick Burger also participated.

$3.6M Gift Funds Pardee Initiative for Global Human Progress

A $3.6 million gift from Fred Pardee will establish within the graduate school the Frederick S. Pardee Initiative for Global Human Progress with the goal of creating and leveraging an array of highly creative, genuinely original approaches to solving multinational and global challenges to improving the future human condition. The Pardee Initiative will take an innovative and forward-looking approach, bringing together Pardee School faculty/RAND researchers and outside scholars and practitioners through a visiting scholars program, conferences and workshops, and an assertive web presence that will allow experts from around the world to participate in the initiative's work and share information and new ideas with a global audience.

Dedication of the James Q. Wilson Collection

James Q. Wilson, one of the past century's most honored and influential thinkers, left an indelible mark on American government and civil society. He had a particular influence on RAND and the Pardee RAND Graduate School through his long service on their governing boards. This influence will continue through the gift of his papers and books to PRGS and the establishment of the James Q. Wilson Collection which will be housed in the RAND library.

The Collection includes the James Q. Wilson Archive of Wilson's papers, lectures, correspondence, photographs, annotated books, and other records, which will be catalogued and processed and then made available to scholars and other researchers. It also includes the James Q. Wilson Public Policy Collection, which consists of books authored by Wilson and all of his doctoral students. The Public Policy Collection will circulate and serve as a resource for PRGS students and RAND staff for years to come. A special room in the RAND library has been established to house public parts of the Collection. Please stop by to see it next time you're in LA.

PRGS and RAND celebrated Wilson's influence and impact, and dedicated the James Q. Wilson Collection, on Thursday, January 17, 2013. Following the dedication, a RAND Policy Forum panel that included PRGS alum Angela Hawken (cohort '98) discussed Wilson's legacy.

Burger Receives Inaugural Harold Brown Faculty Fellowship

PRGS professor Nick Burger has been awarded our first-ever Harold Brown Faculty Fellowship, a two-year award designed to fund a faculty member working in an area with strong student interest but insufficient RAND client funding. Professor Burger will be mentoring two students, Kun Gu and Zhimin Mao (both cohort '11) on an exploratory project related to the greenhouse gas implications of abundant U.S. shale gas resources.

Southwestern Law Students Join PRGS Classes

Three students from Southwestern Law School, Max Einstein, Imran Rahman, and Rebecca Simon, attended PRGS classes this fall and winter as part of their certificate in policy analysis. Pictured are Simon (center) and Einstein (right) in a Policy Analysis class.

Professor Paul Light Visits PRGS

Dr. Paul C. Light, NYU Wagner's Paulette Goddard Professor of Public Service and founding principal investigator of the Global Center for Public Service, visited PRGS for a week in December. He met with PRGS students and faculty and gave a lunchtime talk on "The Proverbs of Social Entrepreneurship: What Really Counts in Successful Social Change."

David An (cohort '10) coauthored the RAND report Critical Materials: Present Danger to U.S. Manufacturing, which suggests the need for actions to mitigate the impact of market distortions on the global manufacturing sector caused by the fact that China is the controlling producer of 11 key raw and semi-finished materials and has instituted export restrictions that have led to two-tier pricing, creating pressure to move manufacturing to China.

Catching Up with Alumni

New Job? Congratulations!

Owen Hill (cohort '03) was elected member of the Colorado legislature in November 2012, representing Colorado Springs.

Athar Osama (cohort '99), is the founder of the Pakistan Innovation Foundation, a nongovernmental organization, and was recently named one of the World Economic Forum's 2013 Young Global Leaders.

Jeffrey Wasserman (cohort '85), was recently appointed Director of RAND Health and Vice President of the RAND Corporation.

Helen Wu (cohort '07) recently took a job as policy and research analyst with the Institute for Population Health Improvement at UC Davis Health System.

Alumni Return, Speak with Students

Aaron Martin (cohort '07), works at Northrop Grumman Corporation. He visited in February and gave a talk on "Life after PRGS: Working within the Defense Sector."

Scott Pace (cohort '85), director of the George Washington University Space Policy Institute and professor of practice in international affairs, visited in December and discussed his latest research, "Integrating National Interests in Space."

David Robalino (cohort '95), lead economist and leader of the Labor and Youth team in the Human Development Anchor of the World Bank, visited in March as part of the International Development Speaker Series (see below).

Casey Wardynski (cohort '97), superintendent of Huntsville City Schools, Alabama, and retired colonel, U.S. Army, visited in January for a lunch with students. He talked about his post-PRGS experience, both at West Point and in education more generally.

Langley writes, "It's pretty neat to actually see [my dissertation] getting used the way it was intended — maybe never getting cited by prestigious academic journals or anything like that, but actually having a practical impact on the Air Force. Not everyone gets to do that before starting pilot training, so I'm quite thankful now looking back for what RAND/PRGS allowed me to do."

Fischbach Presents Congressional Briefing

Jordan Fischbach (cohort '04) has continued the research on which he based his dissertation and is now an expert in adapting to climate change in coastal areas. In the wake of Superstorm Sandy, Fischbach gave a Congressional Briefing in January on lessons the mid-Atlantic region can learn from the Gulf Coast.

Thank You, Alumni Ambassadors!

Our Alumni Ambassadors were especially helpful to PRGS candidates during our admissions cycle, speaking to them by phone, in person, and even by Skype. We had more than 50 alumni respond to our call for volunteers and are tremendously grateful for alumni involvement in the school. As one candidate wrote, "It says something important about PRGS when its alumni are willing to interact with candidates."

Seventh Annual L.A. Policy Symposium, April 5

The annual symposium, a joint effort of PRGS, UCLA, USC, Pepperdine, and Claremont, integrates L.A. area policy school students and faculty with leading practitioners to investigate the pressing policy issues of the day. The keynote speaker this year is Borja Leon, Deputy Mayor for Transportation.

Read more

Dean Plans DC Alumni Lunch

Dean Marquis will be visiting Washington next month and is planning an alumni lunch on April 10. Invitations will be emailed soon, so mark your calendars!